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Johnson: Penalties Cost Us Dear

Sat 15 Nov, 07:09 PM


England manager Martin Johnson blamed individual errors for the 28-14 defeat to Australia and was left frustrated by his side's second-half display.

England held the momentum at half time, having just scored a Nick Easter try to trail by a point, but the Wallabies added two more penalties in the second half in reply to England's one, before Adam Ashley-Cooper dived over the line in the right corner and Matt Giteau converted with 12 minutes to go.

Johnson's men gave away 10 penalties in all, six of which were slotted over by fly-half Giteau and one by captain Stirling Mortlock - a monster of a kick from just inside the halfway line.

"We didn't make them work hard enough to score 28 points," said Johnson, who skippered England to victory over Australia in the 2003 World Cup final.

"We gave them eight penalties and they scored seven and that makes it very difficult.

"We went a little bit off script. Guys in the heat of the battle went with instinct and what they do week in, week out instead of sticking to what were trying to achieve and that was the frustrating thing.

"If you're doing one thing and 14 guys are doing something else that's when you get turnovers and mistakes - and we made far too many of those to keep the pressure on.

"We've got to trust ourselves and back ourselves.

"At half time we really were where we wanted to be but in the second half we just didn't keep the pressure on.

"There was a tremendous amount of restarts and they slowed the tempo of the game down.

"But, you know, they've won by 14 points and they know how to win Test matches. They'll be ecstatic and rightly so."

Fly-half Danny Cipriani has been billed as England's next big thing, but he flattered to deceive at Twickenham, missing two conversions and an easy drop-goal chance early in the second half.

Two breakaways which failed to reap any points showed flashes of the 21-year-old's potential, however, and Johnson refused to criticise his performance.

"I think he's learning all the time what Test-match rugby is all about," he said.

"It's about how you handle the pressure of the field.

"We're together five weeks and then he's back to Wasps and will be playing in Europe.

"It's about finding out what being a full-time rugby player is all about. There are a lot of them doing that."

Johnson added: "We'll get together on Monday. The guys will be sore, they'll be frustrated, they'll be disappointed.

"But we've got to bounce back and put things right as best we can and be here next week."

Johnson's counterpart Robbie Deans was happy with the way his troops withstood the physical challenge, which contributed towards the Wallabies' first win at Twickenham since 2004.

"I'm delighted for the boys," he said. "They put in and they got the reward.

"A lot was asked of them. It was pretty brutal, direct and aggressive but they just kept turning up. They were asked a lot of questions but passed the test.

"Our kicking game was better today and we drew a stressed response, if you like, from England and that kept the scoreboard ticking over.

"There were opportunities for us to carry and finish but we were denied them and I guess we deserve credit for keeping the scoreboard ticking over.

"It doesn't concern us whether the points were penalties or tries. We'd prefer tries but those decisions are made by the opposition."

Captain Stirling Mortlock was delighted with the way his side played after the break, accelerating ahead of England with two more penalties and a converted try late on.

"I was very pleased with how we played after half-time," he said. "The focus was on being positive and looking to play and throughout the whole 80 minutes we did that.

"I had confidence in our scrum."

Much had been made of Australia's supposedly inferior scrum in the build-up to the game after it was dominated by England in last year's World Cup quarter-final, but prop Al Baxter enjoyed a superb game and turned over England's scrum twice.

"It's always very satisfying to do that," said Baxter.

"The whole eight worked well and we felt it went very well today."

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  1. Australia were lucky England are young and made youg errors, all those penalties not suprised they won!

    From jason b, on Mon 17 Nov 12:05AM
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